Child Passenger Safety Facts - NCIPC
National Child Passenger Safety Week, September 21-27, 2008. Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death among children in the United States, but many of these deaths can ...
|
National Safe Boating Week - CDC - NCIPC
Boating Safety. National Safe Boating Week: May 17-23, 2008. More than 70,000,000 Americans enjoy recreational boating each year. Annual boat registrations have increased steadily from ...
|
National Strategies to Advance Child Pedestrian Safety - Panel - NCIPC
National Strategies for Advancing Child Pedestrian Safety. Panel to Prevent Pedestrian Injuries. Meeting Participants
|
National Strategy Child Pedestrian Safety - Introduction - NCIPC
National Strategies for Advancing Child Pedestrian Safety. Introduction. Editors. Richard A. Schieber, MD, MPH Department of Health and Human Services
|
Teen Drivers and Graduated Driver Licensing -- CDC's Injury Center
Read the National Safety Council’s Teen Driver: A Family Guide to Teen Driver Safety * for helpful tips and suggestions. CDC Facts, Activities, and Research
|
National Strategies for Advancing Child Pedestrian Safety - NCIPC
National Strategies for Advancing Child Pedestrian Safety. Now available from CDC’s Injury Center, National Strategies for Advancing Child ...
|
National Strategies for Advancing
... National Center for Injury Prevention and Control Epidemiology Research Division of Unintentional Injury Prevention Carole Guzzetta Child Injury Prevention National Safety Belt ...
|
Global Road Safety Resources Page
National Safety Council. Family Guide to Teen Driver Safety. Offers tips, suggestions and actions parents and guardians can take to manage the risks of teen driving.
|
Motor Vehicle-Related Injuries, Community-Based Interventions to ...
... or expand local motor vehicle injury prevention programs and to promote the adoption, maintenance, or strengthening of state or national traffic safety laws.
|
Walk to School - NCIPC
According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), 4,784 pedestrians in the United States died from traffic-related injuries in 2006, and another 61,000 ...
|